Catch/docs/assertions.md
2014-12-17 18:45:50 +00:00

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Assertion Macros

Most test frameworks have a large collection of assertion macros to capture all possible conditional forms (_EQUALS, _NOTEQUALS, _GREATER_THAN etc).

Catch is different. Because it decomposes natural C-style conditional expressions most of these forms are reduced to one or two that you will use all the time. That said there are a rich set of auxilliary macros as well. We'll describe all of these here.

Most of these macros come in two forms:

Natural Expressions

The REQUIRE family of macros tests an expression and aborts the test case if it fails. The CHECK family are equivalent but execution continues in the same test case even if the assertion fails. This is useful if you have a series of essentially orthogonal assertions and it is useful to see all the results rather than stopping at the first failure.

  • REQUIRE( expression ) and
  • CHECK( expression )

Evaluates the expression and records the result. If an exception is thrown it is caught, reported, and counted as a failure. These are the macros you will use most of the time

Examples:

CHECK( str == "string value" );
CHECK( thisReturnsTrue() );
REQUIRE( i == 42 );
  • REQUIRE_FALSE( expression ) and
  • CHECK_FALSE( expression )

Evaluates the expression and records the logical NOT of the result. If an exception is thrown it is caught, reported, and counted as a failure. (these forms exist as a workaround for the fact that ! prefixed expressions cannot be decomposed).

Example:

REQUIRE_FALSE( thisReturnsFalse() );

Floating point comparisons

When comparing floating point numbers - especially if at least one of them has been computed - great care must be taken to allow for rounding errors and inexact representations.

Catch provides a way to perform tolerant comparisons of floating point values through use of a wrapper class called Approx. Approx can be used on either side of a comparison expression. It overloads the comparisons operators to take a tolerance into account. Here's a simple example:

REQUIRE( performComputation() == Approx( 2.1 ) );

By default a small epsilon value is used that covers many simple cases of rounding errors. When this is insufficent the epsilon value (the amount within which a difference either way is ignored) can be specified by calling the epsilon() method on the Approx instance. e.g.:

REQUIRE( 22/7 == Approx( 3.141 ).epsilon( 0.01 ) );

When dealing with very large or very small numbers it can be useful to specify a scale, which can be achieved by calling the scale() method on the Approx instance.

Exceptions

  • REQUIRE_THROWS( expression ) and
  • CHECK_THROWS( expression )

Expects that an exception (of any type) is be thrown during evaluation of the expression.

  • REQUIRE_THROWS_AS( expression, exception type ) and
  • CHECK_THROWS_AS( expression, exception type )

Expects that an exception of the specified type is thrown during evaluation of the expression.

  • REQUIRE_NOTHROW( expression ) and
  • CHECK_NOTHROW( expression )

Expects that no exception is thrown during evaluation of the expression.

Matcher expressions

To support Matchers a slightly different form is used. Matchers will be more fully documented elsewhere. Note that Matchers are still at early stage development and are subject to change.

  • REQUIRE_THAT( lhs, matcher call ) and
  • CHECK_THAT( lhs, matcher call )

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